Who is the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition?

Our mission is to reverse the trend of mass incarceration in Colorado. We are a coalition of nearly 7,000 individual members and over 100 faith and community organizations who have united to stop perpetual prison expansion in Colorado through policy and sentence reform.

Our chief areas of interest include drug policy reform, women in prison, racial injustice, the impact of incarceration on children and families, the problems associated with re-entry and stopping the practice of using private prisons in our state.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

The Denver Post
Denver has spent nearly $60 million in
the past seven years to end homelessness. Yet even with that massive
effort, there are increasing numbers of people on the street.
That dynamic is what led city officials to consider joining the ranks
of many cities across the United States that have banned camping —
and ignited the vigorous debate over whether such a move "criminalizes"
homelessness.
From Portland, Ore., to Sacramento, Calif., Aspen to Moab, homeless
camping has been banned in various forms with ordinances that have
withstood myriad legal challenges, according to Denver Assistant City
Attorney David Broadwell.
On the Front Range, cities have had camping bans for years, including Fort Collins,

Extras

Boulder and Colorado Springs. The outcomes of those bans are as varied as the cities that house them.
"(Denver's) ordinance is modeled to a large degree on the one in
Boulder," Broadwell said. "Because when I did the legal research, the
one in Boulder is a pretty good model for what the courts have upheld."
The $58 million in federal grants, contributions from businesses and
individuals, and city and state money has fueled Denver's Road Home —
the city's seven-year effort to end homelessness. The program cites
successes: 2,662 new housing units, linking 5,800 people to job training
and employment, preventing 5,700 families and individuals from becoming
homeless and mentoring 1,000 seniors and families out of homelessness.
But the city's streets over the past year have filled with homeless
people who are allowed to sleep on public rights of way. Last summer as
many as 200 people were counted sleeping on the 16th Street Mall, and
protesters from the Occupy Denver movement have made the sidewalks near
Civic Center park a permanent encampment.
In an effort to deal with the problem, the city is now looking at an
ordinance that would give police the right to oust those campers.
Homeless advocates across Colorado say the camping ban criminalizes homelessness.
Business and civic leaders say the ban will provoke homeless people
to get help and also clear the downtown area of people sleeping on the
streets at night.
But whether other cities' anti-camping laws have been successful at
helping people get off the streets and into housing depends on whom you
ask.
"It has been an absolute success," said Robert Holmes, director of
Homeward Pikes Peak, a nonprofit working to end homelessness in Colorado
Springs that toughened its urban camping ban in 2010.
"It has not changed a thing in Boulder," said David B. Harrison, an
attorney who has represented homeless campers in court over the past two
years.Ban in Colorado Springs
In 2009, the banks of Fountain Creek and Monument Creek in Colorado
Springs began filling with homeless people, encouraged by the city's
assumption that its camping ban was too vague to be enforced.
At one point, more than 600 homeless campers were counted in the
city. The Interstate 25 corridor became lined with blue tarps in a
massive tent city.